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  2. Immunohistochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunohistochemistry

    Immunohistochemistry can be performed on tissue that has been fixed and embedded in paraffin, but also cryopreservated (frozen) tissue.Based on the way the tissue is preserved, there are different steps to prepare the tissue for immunohistochemistry, but the general method includes proper fixation, antigen retrieval incubation with primary antibody, then incubation with secondary antibody.

  3. Antigen retrieval - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen_retrieval

    After the development of AR, enzyme digestion was rarely used in immunohistochemistry for formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue sections. Although enzyme digestion and antigen retrieval target the same problem in immunohistochemistry, these two techniques differs in both the mode of action and effectiveness, warranting distinct nomenclature. [8]

  4. Perls Prussian blue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perls_Prussian_blue

    Section of liver stained with Perls Prussian blue, showing iron accumulations (blue) consistent with homozygous genetic hemochromatosis. Perls's method is used to indicate "non-heme" iron in tissues such as ferritin and hemosiderin, [6] the procedure does not stain iron that is bound to porphyrin forming heme such as hemoglobin and myoglobin. [2]

  5. Immunostaining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunostaining

    Immunohistochemistry or IHC staining of tissue sections (or immunocytochemistry, which is the staining of cells), is perhaps the most commonly applied immunostaining technique. [2] While the first cases of IHC staining used fluorescent dyes (see immunofluorescence ), other non-fluorescent methods using enzymes such as peroxidase (see ...

  6. Immunofluorescence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunofluorescence

    Immunofluorescence is a widely used example of immunostaining (using antibodies to stain proteins) and is a specific example of immunohistochemistry (the use of the antibody-antigen relationship in tissues). This technique primarily utilizes fluorophores to visualize the location of the antibodies, while others provoke a color change in the ...

  7. PAS diastase stain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PAS_diastase_stain

    PAS-D is a stain often used by pathologists as an ancillary study in making a histologic diagnosis on paraffin-embedded tissue specimens. PAS stain typically gives a magenta color in the presence of glycogen. When PAS and diastase are used together, a light pink color replaces the deep magenta.

  8. Tissue microarray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue_microarray

    Each microarray block can be cut into 100 – 500 sections, which can be subjected to independent tests. Tests commonly employed in tissue microarray include immunohistochemistry, and fluorescent in situ hybridization. Tissue microarrays are particularly useful in analysis of cancer samples. One variation is a Frozen tissue array.

  9. Liver regeneration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver_regeneration

    The liver can rapidly regenerate its damaged tissue, preventing liver failure. However, the speed of liver regeneration depends on whether interleukin 6 (IL 6) is overexpressed. [18] IL 6 is a critical component in priming the hepatocytes for proliferation and it has the crucial role in initiation of the acute phase response in hepatocytes. [5]